I love you.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → I love you and I always want you, don't worry.
- → The trial that now touches the world is for the benefit of all of you, my children, it shows you the ephemeral nature of things in the world and draws your attention to me, your eternal need for love and certainty.
- → Observe your brothers with my love, as eternal souls, at worst lost in the world, not as bodies, distinguish the eternal and the insubstantial.
- → In the world pain is a source of knowledge, pleasure is a source of illusion, the eye that neglects the eternal exchanges the true for the ambiguous.
- → When I speak of love, I mean a formula of existence that appropriates the knowledge of mine, of your being, of infinite knowledge, going beyond a human plan, a formula of essential existence that is not explained in the world and that it only explains in me, God, master and father.
- → The real importance is not about the world, it is about knowledge, the essence for which every child is born and lives, the only basis of existence, the love that leads to eternity.
Recurrences in the text
- → If the main purpose of man is within the world, this titanic work is overbearing or passive, always a failure.
- → Then man knows God, himself and the world.
- → I love you.
- → Understanding the world's evil in depth without knowing me can be awful.
- → I love you and I always want you, don't worry.
- → In the world pain is a source of knowledge, pleasure is a source of illusion, the eye that neglects the eternal exchanges the true for the ambiguous.
- → The destroyer destroys himself and what belongs to him.
- → The world is trying to crush you, don't believe it, trust my love.
- → Love belongs to truth, it is inseparable from truth, if it is not eternal it is not love.
- → The world is an insubstantial structure, subject to destruction, and what belongs to it has the same characteristics.
- → Recognizing the existence of a dimension completely different from the world and one's belonging to it is for man a titanic, necessary work in which he discovers who he is.
- → My son, I love you, trust me.
- → You cannot change the nature of the world, changing the world is not your job.
- → I only ask you to go through the world trusting me, loving me, yourself and others, trying not to increase anyone's pain.
Relative arguments